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State laws that add restrictions on voting are a serious problem, Waldman says
NPR's A Martinez talks to Michael Waldman, president of the nonprofit Brennan Center for Justice at New York University Law School, about the fight for voting rights.
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•
5:29
Djokovic faces possible deportation after Australia again revokes his visa
NPR's Rachel Martin talks to reporter Elizabeth Kulas about Australia once again revoking tennis star Novak Djokovic's visa. This means he could be deported.
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3:21
With Russian troops at Ukraine's border, talks to avert a conflict end deadlocked
The U.S., Russia and European powers have tussled over the post-Cold War era in a series of talks that ended with no resolution to the standoff over Ukraine — which Russia is threatening to invade.
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•
5:56
Democrats are looking for their way forward on voting rights
President Biden will make an in-person pitch to Senate Democrats to pass voting rights legislation — including changing Senate rules. Some Democrats, however, are opposed to ditching the filibuster.
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•
3:45
What's at risk for Republicans as members spread lies about 2020's election?
NPR's A Martinez talks with Republican Sen. Mike Rounds of South Dakota about voting rights, and acknowledgement that there was no widespread fraud in the presidential election.
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7:33
News brief: voting rights, high-filtration masks, U.S.-Russia talks
Democrats look for a way forward on voting rights. Health officials say wearing an effective mask is more important than ever. Russia and NATO go into the third and final round of talks on Ukraine.
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•
11:03
Saxophonist Tony Malaby's unlikely pandemic practice space: the New Jersey Turnpike
Saxophonist Tony Malaby, unlucky at the beginning of the pandemic after catching a very early case of the virus — the subsequent isolation imposed on his playing led him to a unique solution.
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4:57
Why NBA player and political activist Enes Kanter added Freedom to his legal name
NPR's Steve Inskeep speaks with NBA player Enes Freedom, who recently became a U.S. citizen, and has called for a boycott of the Winter Olympics in China due to human rights concerns.
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7:45
Virginia's first Black woman lieutenant governor says we need to move on from slavery
Winsome Sears, a Republican, will be sworn into office Saturday in Virginia alongside Gov.-elect Glenn Youngkin. Sears ran, in part, on the idea that the country's racial reckoning has gone too far.
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4:57
More than 1 million fewer students are in college. Here's how that impacts the economy
People are sitting out college in droves. During the pandemic, undergraduate enrollment has dropped nearly 7%. The long-term effects of this decline could have a dramatic impact on the economy.
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7:01
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